Cops, Criminals, and Neurosurgery: Analyzing 'Three'

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Johnnie To is back in form with "Three" Johnnie To uses his favorite theme of cops and criminals, adds some doctors, and places all the action in a hospital, as he directs a truly agonizing thriller. Suspense is the key word Dr Tong Qian is one of the youngest neurosurgeons in the country, but seems to have stumbled upon a wall, as she has made some mistakes lately, particularly due because she was overconfident. Eventually, a team of policemen headed by Chief Inspector Ken, bring in a criminal with a head injury, Shun. While Dr Qian tries to operate on him, he wakes up, as it is proven that the bullet in his head has not hit something crucial, and Shun does not give permission to operate on him. Furthermore, Inspector Ken seems to be trying to cover up the events that led to his injury and, at the same time to discover the whereabouts of the rest of his gang. Shun also seems to have an agenda in his head, while Dr Qian is set on operating on him. …show more content…

Agony is the key word here. Every main character seems to be drowning in it: Dr Qian for her failures in her line of work, which is very stressful to begin with. Chief Inspector Ken in order to keep the actual events from unveiling. Shun, despite his seemingly cool exterior, in order to make the necessary preparations and because, well, he actually has a bullet in his head. In a setting that soars with tension everything that occurs is a cause for additional stress. A phone call, yelling patients, a half-crazy one who escapes his bed, a particular whistle, every little thing can make the already tense situation to

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